ANNUAL REPORT
MISSION STATEMENT
The Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art enriches teaching, learning and research on the campuses of Northwestern University and in the communities of their surrounding regions by:
• PRESENTING art across time, cultures, and media;
• CONVENING interdisciplinary discussions in which art is a springboard for exploring issues and ideas;
• COLLECTING art that supports the Northwestern University curriculum.
VISION STATEMENT
To be a dynamic, imaginative, and innovative teaching and learning resource at Northwestern University through an artistic program that is a springboard for thought-provoking discussions relevant to the curriculum and to our lives today.
To inspire and develop a new generation of artists, scholars, and arts professionals by providing experiential learning opportunities bridging the classroom and the world beyond the campus.
To serve as a crossroad between campus and community, by creating an environment where all visitors feel welcome to participate.
MESSAGE FROM THE
DIRECTOR
Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts?
This was the title of The Block’s 40th anniversary exhibition, celebrating the addition of 550 works of art to our collection, all encouraging us to think in some way about history. The title is also an expression of The Block’s distinct identity—at the center of who we are is our willingness, indeed our insistence, that we are a museum that asks questions of our institution, its role, and the values that inform it. Our current strategic plan states, “The Block is a space for examining assumptions, reframing questions, and bridging perspectives. We believe deeply in the capacity of art encounters to catalyze
have impact in the future?”
In positing these questions at the center of our work and our organizational culture, we invite our constituencies to reflect along with us. In short, we believe that self-questioning is our essential role as a museum. Inquiry leads us closer to our ideal: taking an active role in shaping a truly diverse, inclusive, and equitable society.
At the center of The Block’s work are partnerships: across our campus, with the communities surrounding Northwestern, and with colleagues in our field nationally and internationally. The care and intention put into the process of building and holding relationships reflect our core values.
Throughout the year, we stopped to ask: “How do we build and sustain relationships in order to have a meaningful impact both within and far beyond our walls?"
thinking about what is at stake for us in our lives.” As we execute this plan, we continually ask:
“How will the stories we tell highlight the ways some histories are present at the expense of others? How will a project help to build or to deepen relationships, between people, ideas, fields of inquiry, between one another? How will our work encourage reflection on our assumptions about the past and on how we wish to
These questions led to exciting milestones in our commitment to centering partnership as our path to meaning making:
• Sharing our exhibition, A Site of Struggle: American Artists Against Anti-Black Violence, with The Montgomery Museum of Fine Art in Alabama, a key center on the Civil Rights Trail, and collaborating with Evanston community advisors in developing programming and visitor experience for the exhibition.
“How do we build and sustain relationships in order to have a meaningful impact both within and far beyond our walls?"
• Facilitating clinical partnerships with the Northwestern University Center for Audiology, Speech, Language, and Learning for individuals diagnosed with Primary Progressive Aphasia, a cognitive disorder in which Northwestern has renowned expertise, using our collection to stimulate communication and build fellowship.
• Building upon our relationship with museum colleagues from Nigeria's National Commission for Museums and Monuments through a professional development summer residency hosted by The Block.
• With faculty colleagues and the generous support of the Buffett Institute for Global Affairs, developing a Climate Crisis + Media Arts Working Group, a platform of exchange for makers, writers, thinkers, and activists from around the world whose work addresses the threat of climate catastrophe.
• Convening a national group of curators, educators, and scholars for field-wide conversations on the ethical responsibility of museums when exhibiting difficult histories.
For The Block team these deep engagements make visible what art can do—activate meaningful experiences and conversations that build connections between people and ideas. We look forward to welcoming you into this dynamic conversation in 2022-2023.
– Lisa Graziose Corrin
Ellen Philips Katz Director, The Block Museum of ArtBLOCK STAFF
Lisa Graziose Corrin
Ellen Philips Katz Director
Kathleen Bickford Berzock
Associate Director of Curatorial Affairs
Lois Taylor Biggs
Terra Foundation Curatorial Research Fellow / Interim Curatorial Assistant
Lindsay Bosch
Senior Manager of Marketing and Communications
Kristina Bottomley
Assistant Director of Collections and Exhibition Management, Senior Registrar
Lori Boyer Contract Registrar
Theresa Busch-Reed Development Program Assistant
Aaron Chatman Manager of Visitors Services
Janet Dees
Steven & Lisa Munster Tananbaum
Curator of Modern & Contemporary Art
Melanie Garcia Sympson Curatorial Associate
Corinne Granof
Academic Curator
Malia Haines-Stewart
Associate Film Programmer
Carl Kauffman
Assistant to the Registrar
Isabella Ko Engagement Coordinator
Mark Leonhart
Lead Preparator
Rebecca Lyon Head Projectionist
Emily Martin Curatorial Research Associate
Michael Metzger
Pick-Laudati Curator of Media Arts
Erin Northington
Susan & Stephen Wilson Associate Director, Campus and Community Education and Engagement
Rocio Olasimbo Visitors Services Officer
Jordan Poorman Cocker
2021-2024 Terra Foundation Guest Co-Curator of Indigenous Art
Elisa Quinlan Director of Development
Emmanuel Ramos-Barajas Media & Communications Coordinator
STUDENT ASSOCIATES
Ayinoluwa Abegunde
Chemical Engineering (2022)
Mayán Alvarado-Goldberg
Cognitive Science and Global Health (2024)
Solome Bezuneh
Communication Studies (2024)
Carolina Carret Legal Studies, Art History, and BIP (2023)
Vitoria Monteiro de Carvalho
Faria
Art History and Economics (2023)
STUDENT WORKERS
Gabrielle Butler
Communications and Administrative Aide — Global Health & Biology (2025)
Amelia Mylvaganam
Curatorial Research Aide — Radio/ Television/Film & Computer Science (2023)
Karan Gowda Biological Sciences, Global Health Studies and Classics (2022)
Chayda Harding History (2022)
Zeki Hirsch
Art History (2024)
Hyohee Kim Learning Sciences and Asian American Studies (2022)
Katy Kim
Art History and Political Science (2023)
Nozizwe Msipa Communication Studies (2024)
Jenna Robertson
Assistant to the Director
Essi Rönkkö
Associate Curator of Collections
América Salomón
Engagement Coordinator & Educator
Joe Scott
Collections & Exhibitions Coordinator
Hadia Shaikh
Assistant to the Director
Rita Shorts
Business Administrator
Dan Silverstein
Associate Director of Collections & Exhibitions Management
Jeff Smith
Senior Business Administrator
James Stauber
Visitors Services Office
Alisa Swindell
Curatorial Research Associate
Vincent Taylor
Visitors Services Associate
Kate Hadley Toftness
Senior Advancement Manager
Margeaux Rocco
Economic, Art Theory and Practice, and Art History (2023)
Bengi Rwabuhemba
Cultural Anthropology, Global Health (2023)
Joyce Wang
Economics and Data Science (2024)
Bobby Yalam
Social Policy and Mathematical Methods in the Social Sciences (2024)
Hank Yang
Journalism and Political Science (2024)
GRAD FELLOWS & UNDERGRAD INTERNS
Sarah Dwider
Art History Graduate Fellow
æryka hollis o’neil Interdisciplinary Graduate Fellow
Madie Giaconia
Undergraduate Curatorial Intern — Radio/TV/Film and Art History (2024)
2,125 TOUR VISITORS SCHEDULED GROUP VISITS TO GALLERIES
464 NU STUDENTS FROM 20 DEPARTMENTS & SCHOOLS
CAMPUS PARTNERS
Academic Residential Initiatives
Alice Kaplan Institute for the Humanities + Kaplan's CARE Dialogue
Black Arts Consortium
Buffett Institute for Global Affairs, Climate
Crisis and Media Arts Working Group
Buffett Institute for Global Affairs, Race Caste and Colorism Project
Campus Inclusion and Community
Center for Audiology, Speech, Language, and Learning (NUCASLL)
Center for Native American and Indigenous Research (CNAIR)
Center for the Study of Diversity and Democracy
Counseling and Psychology Services
Department of Art History
Department of Art, Theory and Practice
Department of Radio, Television, and Film
1,615 PROGRAM ATTENDEES
70 GUESTS INCLUDING ARTISTS, STUDENTS, SCHOLARS & LEADERS
483
STAFF & STUDENTS FROM 40 CAMPUS OFFICES
764 HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS, STAFF, & TEACHERS
Feinberg School of Medicine, Center for Heath Equity Transformation
Feinberg School of Medicine, Palliative Medicine
MultiCultural Filmmakers Collective (student group)
Northwestern Prison Education Project
Northwestern University Archives
Office of Alumni Relations and Development
Office of Equity
Office of Institutional Diversity and Inclusion
Office of Undergraduate Research, Emerging Scholars Program
One Book One Northwestern
Pritzker Pucker Studio Lab for the `Promotion of Mental Health via Cinematic Arts
Program of African American Studies
Program of Comparative Literary Studies
Program of Documentary Media
Program of Gender & Sexuality Studies
Program of Performance Studies
Program of Screen Cultures
Program of Sound Arts and Industries
Program of Writing for Screen + Stage
Sexual Health and Assault Peer Educators (SHAPE)
Social Justice Education
The Alumnae of Northwestern University
The Sexualities Project at Northwestern (SPAN)
Undergraduate Prison Education Partnership
Wildcat Welcome
Wirtz Center for the Performing Arts
Women's Center
A Long Walk Home Arts of Life
Nations
Video Festival
Flower Child Chicago La Guardia Community College American Sign Language (ASL) - English Interpretation Program (AEIP)
South Side Liberation Center
Students Organized Against Racism (S.O.A.R.)
The Chicago Torture Justice Memorials Youth and Opportunity United (Y.O.U.)
YWCA Evanston/North Shore Equity Institute
BOARD OF ADVISORS
Stuart H. Bohart
Aspen, CO, Appointed 2016, Board of Advisors Co-Chair, Partner and President, FORT Investment Management (WCAS’ 89, ’25P)
Cheryl Johnson-Odim
Evanston, IL, Appointed 2020, Board of Advisors Co-Chair, Provost Emerita, Dominican University (WCAS MA ’75,WCAS PhD’78)
Anu Aggarwal
Chicago, IL, Appointed 2015, Art Collector (SP KSM’97)
Mary Baglivo
New York, NY, Appointed 2017, Chief Marketing Officer, Pace University, (MDL’81)
Clare Bell
New York, NY, Appointed 2018, Director of Exhibitions, Guggenheim Museum (Parent ’22)
Daniel S. Berger
Chicago, IL, Appointed 2019, Medical Director, Northstar Healthcare, Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine, UIC
Christine Bernstein
Pacific Palisades, CA, Appointed 2016, Artist ('17, '23 P)
Julie Bernstein
New York, NY Appointed 2019, Art Collector and principal and founder of the interior and floral design firm Cambridge Bell Flowers ('24 P)
Priscilla Vail Caldwell
Brooklyn, NY, Appointed 2016, Curator and Advisor, PVC Fine Arts, LLC. (WCAS’85)
John Corbett
Chicago, IL, Appointed 2013, Gallerist, Corbett vs. Dempsey Gallery, and professor (Comm PhD ’94)
Lisa G. Corrin
Evanston, IL, Ex-officio, The Ellen Philips Katz Director of The Block Museum
Nicole Druckman
Evanston, IL, Appointed 2013, Grant Writer (WCAS’92) (SP WCAS’93)
Kristin Peterson Edwards
Darien, CT, Appointed 2013, Owner, kpeArts; Community Volunteer (WCAS’92)
Kate Ezra
New Haven, CT, Retired, Yale University Art Gallery (TGS PhD ’83)
James Geier
Chicago, IL, Appointed 2013, Founder/ President, 555 International
Lynn Hauser
Chicago, IL, Appointed 2012, Retired Ophthalmologist (FSM’74 ’76 ’80) (SP FSM’75 ’79 ’80)
Steven P. Henry
New York, NY, Appointed 2018, Senior Director at Paula Cooper Gallery (WCAS’85)
Rashid Johnson
New York, NY, Appointed 2019, Artist
Ellen Philips Katz
New York, NY, Appointed 2005,Trustee, Northwestern University (WCAS’70)
Zeynep Keyman
Zürich and Istanbul, Appointed 2013, Art Collector, (Parent ’07, ’12)
James A. Klein
Riverwoods, IL, Appointed 2010, President, Acrobat Marketing Company (MDL ’68; ’69)
Dianne Loeb Seattle, WA, Appointed 2014, NU Regent; Community Volunteer (KSM’80) (SP KSM’81)
Angela Lustig
Chicago, IL, Appointed 2014, Artist; Former VP/Group Creative Director, Abelson Taylor (SP MDL’67 ’68)
R. Hugh Magill
Winnetka, IL, Appointed 2006, Senior Vice President, Northern Trust Company (SP Music ’86)
Kim Allen-Niesen
Los Angeles, CA, Appointed 2017, Art Collector (Parent ’16, ’19)
Craig Ponzio
Evergreen, CO, Appointed 2019, Retired CEO, Art Collector, (Parent '22)
Irwin Press
Chicago, IL, Appointed 2012, Retired Professor, Notre Dame University; and co-founder, Press Ganey Associates (WCAS ’59)
Richard M. Rieser, Jr. Northbrook, IL, Appointed 2013, Founder and former CEO, First Oak Brook Bancshares (SP SESP ’70)
Sandra L. Riggs
Lake Forest, IL, Appointed 2012, Board Member, The Alumnae of Northwestern University (Comm’65)
Christine O. Robb
Winnetka, IL, Appointed 2011, Past Chair, Board of Advisors. President and CEO, Artists’ Concepts, Inc. (WCAS '66, '93P) (SP WCAS '66, '93 P)
Selig D. Sacks
New York, NY, Appointed 2007, Managing Director and General Counsel, Ruton Capital (WCAS’69) (Parent ’17)
Jean E. Shedd
Evanston, IL, Retired NU Associate Provost for Budget, Facilities, and Analysis (KSM’97)
Diane Solomon
New York, NY, Appointed 2012, Art Collector (Parent ’10, ’15)
Lisa Tananbaum
New York, NY, Appointed 2015, Art Collector (WCAS’86)
Martha Tedeschi
Cambridge, MA, Appointed 2017, Director of the Harvard Art Museums (WCAS PhD’94)
Ken Thompson
Lincolnshire, IL, Appointed 2015, Director of Finance Transformation, PwC (WCAS ’91)
Kathleen Bickford Berzock leads Caravans of Gold tour at National Museum of African Art, Washington DCPROGRAMS & CINEMA 2021-2022
Exhibition Keynote Conversation: Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts
Septembert 29
Outdoor screening of "The Reversal" (Offsite)
September 30
Online Curator Tour: Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts
September 30
Ephraim Asili: THE INHERITANCE (2020)Theatrical Screening
October 2
Retelling Resistance: CEDDO (1977) - 35mm Theatrical Screening
October 13
More at the Museum: Online Collection Talk
October 14
Art Talks! with Block Student Associates
October 15
Alumni Open House
October 15
Kelly Reichardt: FIRST COW (2020) - Theatrical Screening
October 16
Students Shape the Collection: Artist Talk with Leonard Suryajaya
October 20
Curator Tour: Who Says, Who Shows, What CountsCritical Portraits
October 21
Anthony Mann: THUNDER BAY (1953) on 35mm
October 23
Retelling Resistance: Ouveratures (2020)Theatrical Screening
October 27
Art Talks! with Block Student Associates
October 29
Penny Allen: PROPERTY (1978) - Theatrical Screening
October 30
Retelling Resistance: CUBAN FIGHT AGAINST THE DEMONS (1972) - Theatrical Screening
November 3
First Nations Film and Video Festival: Bawaadan Collective shorts
November 6
Sky Hopinka: Channeling Indigenous Histories
November 10
Curator Tour: Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts - Place & Memory
November 11
Art Talks! with Block Student Associates
November 12
Sky Hopinka: MALNI— TOWARDS THE OCEAN, TOWARDS THE SHORE (2020) - Theatrical
November 13
THIRZA CUTHAND: NDN SURVIVAL TRILOGY and other works
November 17
NORTH BY CURRENT with filmmaker Angelo Madsen Minax -- Theatrical Screening
December 1
Online Curator Tour: Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts - Reframing the Past
December 2
Art Talks! with Block Student Associates
December 3
More at the Museum: Online Collection Talk
January 13
Opening Conversation: A Site of Struggle: American Art against Anti-Black Violence [Online]
January 29
Place and Memory: Art Talks with Block Museum Student Associates
February 5
A Site of Struggle: American Art Against Anti-Black Violence – A Northwestern University Panel Discussion [Online]
February 8
The American Sector (2020) with filmmaker Courtney Stephens
February 10
Terra Femme (2021) live documentary-performance with Courtney Stephens
February 11
Exhibition Gallery Talk: A Site of Struggle with curator Janet
Dees
February 12
The Birdpeople (2004)
February 16
Artist Talk: Laylah Ali and Bethany Collins
February 17
Wilmington 10 – USA 10,000 (1979)
February 18
Michele D. Marincola: “Objects of Memory, Monuments to Trauma: Conservation and Preservation Issues”
February 23
Holding Binoculars, Pointing a Camera: A Cinema of Birdwatching
February 25
Place and Memory: Art Talks with Block Museum Student Associates
February 26
Kaplan Humanities scholars explore work by Shan Goshorn with Lois Biggs, Curatorial AssistantBlock Cinema Artist Talk: Crystal Z. Campbell -- Notes from Black Wall Street
March 2
Environments of Struggle: Crystal Z. Campbell and Christopher Harris
March 3
Exhibition Gallery Talk: A Site of Struggle with Leslie Harris and Miriam Petty
March 3
Flesh to Spirit: Materiality and Abstraction in Black Experimental Film
March 4
Art, Activism, and Contemporary Resonances of the 1935 NAACP exhibition “An Art Commentary on Lynching”
March 9
Place and Memory: Art Talks with Block Museum Student Associates
March 12
More at the Museum: Online Collection Talk
March 31
Night's End (2022) with filmmaker Jennifer Reeder
March 31
Writing with Fire (2021)
April 7
The State of Texas vs Melissa (2020) with NPEP & UPEP
April 8
A Conversation Series on Museum Practice: On Collaboration
April 13
SWEETGRASS (2009) with filmmaker Lucien CastaingTaylor
April 14
LEVIATHAN (2012) with filmmakers Lucien CastaingTaylor & Verena Paravel
April 15
A Conversation Series on Museum Practice: On Context
April 20
Workshop with Filmmaker Chase Joynt
April 20
NO ORDINARY MAN (2020) with filmmaker Chase Joynt
April 21
MAKE A DISTINCTION (2021) and FIELD RESISTANCE (2019) with filmmakers
April 22
Exhibition Gallery Talk: A Site of Struggle with YWCA
Evanston/Northshore's Equity Institute
April 23
A Conversation Series on Museum Practice: On Counterpoints
April 27
THE INEVITABLE DEFEAT OF MISTER AND PETE (2013)
April 28
Block by Block: Short Films About Chicago
April 29
Opening Celebration: blossom soup, blossom salad
May 5
FAUNA + DEAR CHANTAL with Nicolás Pereda
May 4
On Racial Trauma and Healing: Prentis Hemphillt
May 11
CETTE MAISON (2022) with filmmaker Miryam Charles
May 12
MA BELLE, MY BEAUTY (2021) with filmmaker Marion
Hill
May 13
To Render the Infinite: Visual Genealogies of Black Kinship
May 25
Teasers of Empire: 1930s Action-Adventure Trailers and the Spectacle of Imperialism
May 26
THE ISLAND OF ST MATTHEWS (2013) with Kevin Jerome Everson]
May 27
Behind the Wire: Documenting Kenya's Independence Movement through Digital Heritage
May 19
Opening Night of Like Water Through Stone: Celebrating Hamid Naficy
June 2
Acknowledgments 2022 (revelations of life)
June 15
Through the Looking Glass (Pt 1): NU MFA Doc Media Thesis Showcase
June 9
Through the Looking Glass (Pt 2): NU MFA Doc Media Thesis Showcase
June 10
Exhibition Gallery Talk: A Site of Struggle with Emily Martin
June 17
Online event: 5 Stages of Nile with Miles Reuben & Darryl DeAngelo Terrell
July 8 - July 15
Exhibition Gallery Talk: A Site of Struggle with Alisa Swindell
July 9
To Trouble, Escape & Exceed - Curated by the Concerned Black Image Makers
July 9
Spending Time: A Sculpture Walk and Talk with Artist Neil Goodman
August 4
EXHIBITION
— FALL 2021 WHO SAYS, WHO SHOWS, WHAT COUNTS: Thinking About History with The Block’s
Collection
Main & Alsdorf Galleries
September 22 - December 05, 2021
In 2020-2021 Northwestern University’s Block Museum of Art celebrated its 40th anniversary. Leading up to this milestone, The Block introduced a major initiative to acquire works of art that encourage critical thinking about the representation of history. This initiative and The Block’s anniversary celebration culminated with Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts: Thinkingabout History with The Block’s Collection, an exhibition inviting visitors to think critically about how artists, artworks, and museums engage with narratives of the past.
Highlighting more than eighty modern and contemporary artworks recently acquired by The Block Museum of Art, the exhibition considered our constantly changing understanding of the past through the lens of artistic practice. It featured works by a wide-ranging selection of artists exploring the idea of history, such as Dawoud Bey, Shan Goshorn, the Guerrilla Girls, Louise Lawler, Kerry James Marshall, Catherine Opie, Walid Raad, Man Ray, Edward Steichen, and Kara Walker. Including voices from students, alumni, faculty, and staff, Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts invites visitors to reflect on the ways in which art can facilitate multidisciplinary connections, ask challenging questions, and tell stories about issues relevant to our lives.
Student Associates tour Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts with curator Essi Rönkkö Exhibition poster for Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts featuring Victor Diop, Juan dePareja, 2014. Pigment inkjet print. Purchased with funds from the Irwin and Andra S. Press Collection Endowment, 2016.9.2.EXHIBITION PUBLICATION
WHO SAYS, WHO SHOWS, WHAT COUNTS: Thinking
About History with The Block’s Collection
Paperback
ISBN: 9781732568426
Published: October 2021
Northwestern University Press 144 Pages, 9.75 x 7.00 in
Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts: Thinking about History with The Block’s Collection invites readers to think critically about how artists, artworks, and museums engage with narratives of the past. Highlighting more than fifty contemporary artworks recently acquired by the Block Museum of Art at Northwestern University, the book considers our constantly changing understanding of the past through the lens of artistic practice.
Richly illustrated and written for a general audience, this book is a companion publication to the 2021 exhibition of the same name, presented to celebrate the museum’s fortieth anniversary. Consisting of contributions by students, faculty, Block curators, and Northwestern staff from across the University community, fifty short essays reflect the perspectives of more than twenty different academic departments
EXHIBITION — FALL 2021
SKY HOPINKA:
Cloudless Blue Egress of Summer
Katz Gallery
September 22 - December 05, 2021
Presented as a complement to Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts, Cloudless Blue Egress of Summer, a two-channel video installation by the artist Sky Hopinka (Ho-Chunk/Pechanga, born 1984, Ferndale, WA), offered an immersive and elusive reckoning with histories of colonial violence and Indigenous resistance. The thirteen-minute work examines the history of the Castillo de San Marcos, the oldest fort in the continental United States.
As strands of sound, text, and image intersect across the two screens, Hopinka plays with the friction between them, asking the viewer to absorb narratives that evade the conventions of linear history. These juxtapositions expose the challenge of reconstructing the past from the incomplete fragments left behind in the archives of the colonizer. While pointedly addressing a traumatic legacy, Hopinka also uses the expressive possibilities of the digital image to open up new spaces of historical imagination, where unjust edifices dissolve to expose glimpses of breathtaking beauty and tranquility across an expansive canvas.
FILM SERIES — FALL 2021
RETELLING RESISTANCE
Block Cinema
Inspired by the exhibition Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts, Retelling Resistance explored the intersection of historical memory and radical imagination. The films in this series revisit early episodes in the struggle against colonial and cultural imperialism, from the first revolts against the Spanish administration in Cuba to the Haïtian Revolution. These filmmakers embrace anachronism over historical accuracy, collapsing the past and the present to invoke a revolutionary spirit that endures across centuries. Including rarely-screened landmarks of Third Cinema alongside daring new experiments in collective filmmaking, Retelling Resistance invited us to expand our conceptions of history, and to contemplate the struggles for justice and independence we still confront today.
550 NEW WORKS ACQUIRED FOR 40TH ANNIVERSARY
FACULTY ESSAYS FROM 21 DEPARTMENTS
MODERN LUXURY: Rethinking History (August 23, 2021)
“The works in this exhibition particularly express the way our collecting focus has evolved to think about global perspectives, to ensure that we have a collection that allows for us to have conversations about the complex world in which we live”
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: The Art Side of History: The Block Museum looks to the past in one of Fall's key exhibitions (October 1, 2021)
THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN: The Block Museum’s fall exhibition “Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts” questions historical narratives (October 5, 2021)
“Institutions are made of the people who run them, and collections are moral archives [...] Whenever a museum does an exhibition from its own collection, it seems to be a self-portrait of itself.”
THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN: Sky Hopinka’s “Cloudless Blue Egress of Summer” exhibition reckons with colonial violence, highlights Indigenous resistance (October 6, 2021)
“We’ve seen over the last several months, particularly in Canada, reckoning with the boarding school system with the discoveries that have been made [...] Sky’s work really addresses many of these questions and themes, and it’s a really powerful moment to be presenting this at The Block and to be creating these conversations.”
544 VISITORS AND STUDENTS IN FACILITAED TOURS
NEWCITY ART: Museums as Laboratories for Narrative Change: A Review of Who Says, What Shows, What Counts at the Block Museum (November 10, 2021)
"The work on display here successfully exhibits artists that use visual tropes in a way that decenters the Western canon to instead showcase voices and perspectives that have historically been left out... “Who Says, What Shows” reminds us that museums can thus serve as a laboratory for the next generation to rewrite history."
NEWCITY ART: The Friction of History: A Review of Sky Hopinka at the Block Museum (October 13, 2021)
SIXTY INCHES FROM CENTER: A Retelling of Contemporary Art History at The Block Museum (November 30, 2021)
"Before the advent of the camera, only the very wealthy could afford to commission a portrait of themselves. Even since the widespread availability of the photographic image, the types of people whose portraits hang in museums tend to be of a narrow demographic or have achieved a certain status."
MEDIUM / XIAO FARIA DA CUNHA: Private Memories in Art — Portraiture, Landscapes, and Historic Storytelling (January 20, 2022)
"In other words, “Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts” has proved that the most intimate human moments are just as powerful as the loudest public advocacy. Therefore, from here on, fret not if your art doesn’t seem to be “relevant, provocative, and advocating.” The loudest statements often tread in the most silent footsteps. And as time goes by, our art is what will speak for us and tell our stories."
EXHIBITION — WINTER & SPRING 2022
EXHIBITION — WINTER 2022 A SITE OF STRUGGLE: AMERICAN ART AGAINST ANTI-BLACK VIOLENCE
READ MORE >>>>
The Block Museum of Art: January 26 - July 10, 2022 Montgomery Museum of Fine Art, Montgomery, Alabama: August 13 - November 6, 2022
Originating at Northwestern's Block Museum of Art A Site of Struggle explored how artists have engaged with the reality of anti-Black violence and its accompanying challenges of representation in the United States over a 100 + year period.
Images of African American suffering and death have constituted an enduring part of the nation’s cultural landscape, and the development of creative counterpoints to these images has been an ongoing concern for American artists. A Site of Struggle took a new approach to looking at the intersection of race, violence, and art by investigating the varied strategies American artists have used to grapple with anti-Black violence, ranging from representation to abstraction and from literal to metaphorical. The exhibition focused on works created between the 1890s and 2013—situating contemporary artistic practice within a longer history of American art and visual culture. It foregrounded African Americans as active shapers of visual culture and highlights how art has been used to protest, process, mourn, and memorialize anti-Black violence.
A Site of Struggle was organized by the Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, and curated by Janet Dees, Steven and Lisa Munster Tananbaum Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at The Block Museum of Art, with the assistance of Alisa Swindell, Curatorial Research Associate.
Lead support for the exhibition was generously provided by the Terra Foundation for American Art. Major support is provided by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. The project was also supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Bernstein Family Contemporary Art Fund, the Myers Foundations, the Block DEAI Fund, and the Block Board of Advisors. Generous support was contributed by William Spiegel and Lisa Kadin, the Alumnae of Northwestern University, the David C. and Sarajean Ruttenberg Arts Foundation, the Illinois Arts Council Agency, the Elizabeth F. Cheney Foundation, and by Lynne Jacobs. The related publication was co-published by The Block Museum of Art and Princeton University Press and is supported by Furthermore: a program of the J.M. Kaplan Fund and the Sandra L. Riggs Publication Fund.
Art can provide a moment of pause, an opportunity for us to sit with the complex and deep-rooted nature of anti-Black violence, and contemplate how it impacts us individually and as a society. In these works, we may find recognition of our own suffering— which is important in and of itself— as well as a provocation to continue, or begin for the first time, striving to eliminate this suffering through concrete actions.
This year opportunities all museum perspective and independent This work from presentations to brochures, strategies, consider and interpretation.
— Janet Deesyear our students have had opportunities to work with staff across museum departments, gaining rich perspective into both collaborative independent curatorial work. work now takes many shapespresentations and installation, brochures, blogs and other digital strategies, as our students help us consider new approaches to research interpretation.
EXHIBITION PUBLICATION
A SITE OF STRUGGLE
American Art against Anti-Black Violence
Hardcover
ISBN: 9780691209272
Published: Jan 25, 2022
160 Pages, 11 x 9 in. / Illus: 60 color illus. Princeton University Press
The book’s essays offer new perspectives from established and emerging scholars working in the fields of African American studies, art history, communications, and history. Contributors include Sampada Aranke, Courtney Baker, Huey Copeland, Janet Dees, Leslie Harris, and LaCharles Ward. Investigating the conceptual and aesthetic strategies artists have used to engage with the issue of anti-Black violence, A Site of Struggle highlights diverse works of art and ephemera from the post-Reconstruction period of the late nineteenth century to the founding of the Black Lives Matter movement.
Published by Princeton University Press in association with the Mary
EXHIBITION RESOURCES CARE GUIDE
This pamphlet brought together selected works from the exhibition that are paired with artworks from The Block’s collection, poetry, and a guided meditation created specifically for this exhibition. The call-and-response structure was meant to create a dialogue between the emotional weight of selected works from A Site of Struggle and images from the museum’s collection that emphasize themes of community joy, motherhood, selfdetermination, agency, and Black womanhood.
EXHIBITION RESOURCES VISITOR'S GUIDE
This guide was made available to all exhibition visitors in person and online, offering context to the complex exhibition experience. The guide included a curator's introduction, an exploration of themes and programming, reflection questions offered by our community advisors, frequently asked questions, and select resources for further learning. The guide also contained visitor recommendations for creating a space of mutual respect and mindful presence within the gallery.
OF
12,970 VISITORS AT BLOCK
440 COMMENT CARDS
912 PROGRAM ATTENDEES OF 13 PROGRAMS
800 CINEMA ATTENDEES OF 8 EVENTS
NUMBERS
8,558 VISITORS AT MONTGOMERY MUSEUM
108 GROUP VISITS
EXHIBITION COMMENTS VISITORS RESPOND
The Block Museum staff recognized the challenging nature of the material in this exhibition, the range of responses it might elicit, and the impact it carried for visitors whose identities and lived experiences intersect with the histories presented.
Over 400 guests shared their reflections through comment cards. All cards were archived as part of the legacy of the exhibition, and many visitors chose to allow their responses to be made public. In gratitude we share a selection of comment card responses on the website ASiteofStruggle.org. a messages
READ THE RESPONSES HERE
THE HYPE MAGAZINE: Meet Janet Dees Curator of ‘A Site of Struggle: American Art Against Anti-Black Violence’ Art Exhibit
"Usually all my exhibitions start with an artwork or two or three that kind of haunts me that i can't get out of my mind" Watch Interview here.
THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN: The Block Museum’s “A Site of Struggle” displays art against anti-Black violence
CHICAGO READER: Temp check
FOX NEWS CHICAGO: 'A Site of Struggle' exhibit on display at Northwestern University
EVANSTON ROUNDTABLE: Local events to finish off your Black History Month - Evanston RoundTable
ABC NEWS SAN DIEGO: Exhibit spotlights anti-Black violence through history
POLITICO: The Shows: Sunday listings for Feb. 20, 2022
ABC7 CHICAGO: Northwestern University exhibit depicts history of anti-Black violence: 'Impossible to erase'
SCENE+HEARD: Why you really, really need to see The Block’s new art exhibition on anti-Black violence
With approximately 65 pieces of art, “A Site of Struggle'' mirrors the many manifestations of racism, whether physical, psychological, or otherwise. The exhibition includes a sculpture of a Black man’s head behind t-shaped crosshairs; a garment memorializing a Black transgender woman; and lynching photographs in which victims were digitally removed to spotlight onlookers.
LA TIMES: Sunday Talk Show Guests
NBC NEWS: New exhibit highlights art against anti-Black violence
MSNBC: New Exhibit Highlights Art Against Anti-Black Violence WATCH INTERVIEW
WIDEWALLS: The Block Museum Explores How American Art Responded to Anti-Black Violence | Widewalls
THE HYPE MAGAZINE: A Site of Struggle: American Art against Anti-Black Violence debuts at the Block Museum of Art
“The Block Museum of Art is committed to developing bold, meaningful and challenging projects that ask audiences to reconsider accepted narratives and search for new modes of understanding and active reflection,” said Lisa Corrin, The Block Museum Ellen Philips Katz director. “In its breadth of scholarly and community collaborations and support of the museum’s ongoing social justice initiatives, A Site of Struggle is one of the most important exhibitions the institution has ever undertaken.”
EURO NEWS: L'art américain dénonce les violences antiafro-descendants
USA TODAY: Timely or timeless? Art combats anti-Black violence
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY: Top 10 - Fall 2021: Art, Architecture & Photography
INDIA EDUCATION DIARY: Art as a way to protest, process, mourn and memorialize anti-Black violence in America
BFC Presidential Associate Professor of Art History, University of Pennsylvania
"There's love's work in Huey Copeland and Janet Dees's detailed specification of the acts of care in preparing an emotionally devastating exhibition"
—David Velasco
Editor-in-Chief, Artforum
“The show is not only modeling curatorial best practices; it’s modeling spectatorial best practices as well.”
—Huey Copeland
SPOTLIGHT A SITE OF STRUGGLE MEDIA COVERAGE
The exhibition caught the attention of local and national broadcast media including Chicago PBS, ABC, FOX and NBC affiliates and national spots on USA Today and MSNBC.
NBC CHICAGO: New Exhibit Examines How Artists Have Dealt With Anti-Black Violence
AFRICANEWS: Art exhibition explores history of pervasive anti-Black violence in US
MIRAGE NEWS: ‘A Site of Struggle: American Art against Anti-Black Violence’ debuts at Block Museum of Art Jan. 26
NORTHWESTERN NEWS: ‘A Site of Struggle: American Art against Anti-Black Violence’ coming to the Block Museum
ART AND OBJECT: Northwestern University to Host "A Site of Struggle"
CULTURE TYPE: On the Rise: Curators who took new appointments
SEE GREAT ART: Artists take on anti-Black violence in A Site of Struggle exhibit
NEWS BREAK DALLAS, TX: ‘A Site of Struggle: American Art against Anti-Black Violence’ to debut Jan. 26 at Block Museum
ART AND EDUCATION: A Site of Struggle: American Art against Anti-Black Violence
REDEYE CHICAGO: Top 10 Visual Art in Chicago: Big Shows, Big Messages
F-STOP MAGAZINE: A Site of Struggle: American Art against Anti-Black Violence @ The Block Museum of Art
TIME OUT CHICAGO: A Site of Struggle: American Art against Anti-Black Violence
Interesting race, violence, and art by investigating the varied strategies American artists have used to grapple with anti-Black violence, the artwork ranges from literal to metaphorical. And while it may be showcasing works created between the 1890s and 2013 — it speaks to contemporary artistic practice within a longer history of American art and visual culture.
BLACK NEWS: The Block Museum of Art unveils its latest exhibition, “A Site of Struggle: American Art against AntiBlack Violence”
CRAIN'S CHICAGO BUSINESS: Arts and Culture Intel
COLOSSAL: 'A Site of Struggle: American Art against AntiBlack Violence' @ The Block Museum of Art
ARTFIXDAILY: 'A Site of Struggle: American Art against Anti-Black Violence' Opens at The Block Museum of Art
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Exhibition rounds up more than a century of art showing and condemning racial violence
THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN: “A Site of Struggle” brings historical context to anti-Black violence
WTTW NEWS: New Exhibit Explores Intersection of AntiBlack Violence and Art
“From a very early time, artists were engaged in the politics of making it known there was an injustice happening [...] That was at a time when you had lower literacy rates. So people had to rely on visuals to reach larger audiences, because not everyone was reading the paper or picking up books.”
EVANSTON ROUNDTABLE: ‘An archive of Black creative genius’: A Site of Struggle exhibit explores resistance to anti-Black violence
“This social event informs, it moves, it creates action, and Evanston’s community is not foreign to that. Specifically, in the Black community in Evanston, which dates back to 1850, there’s always been a movement of action and addressing social issues.”
NEWCITY ART: Art Top 5: May 2022
SPOTIFY: American Art against Anti-Black Violence | Janet Dees | NU People Podcast E4
THE JOURNAL OF BLACKS IN HIGHER EDUCATION: Recent Books of Interest to African American Scholars
EXHIBITION ADVISORS COMMUNITY ADVISORS
Advised by Northwestern’s Office of Neighborhood and Community Relations, The Block embarked on a multi-year series of dialogues which solicited input on A Site of Struggle from diverse community stakeholders to shape visitor experience; co-develop collaborative programming on issues of racial injustice; and build trust for continued engagement.
Dino Robinson Founder, Shorefront Legacy Center, Facilitator
Tiffany McDowell
YWCA Evanston/Northshore’s Equity Institute, Facilitator
LeAnn Jenkins
YWCA Evanston/Northshore’s Equity Institute, Facilitator
Melissa Blount artist/activist/ psychotherapist- Black Lives Matter Witness Quilt project/
Fran Joy artist
Rev. Dr. Michael Nabors President Evanston N.A.A.C.P/ Pastor Second Baptist Church
Nathan Norman Youth and Young Adult Program Supervisor, City of Evanston
Rebeca Mendoza District 65 School Board, Evanston Latinos
ARTISTS EXHIBITED
Laylah Ali (American, b.1968)
George Wesley Bellows (American, 18821925),
George Biddle (American 1885-1973),
Elizabeth Catlett (American, 1915-2012),
Darryl Cowherd (American, b. 1940), Bob Crawford (American, 1938-2015),
Ernest Crichlow (American, 1914-2005),
David Antonio Cruz (American, b. 1974),
Emory Douglas (American, b. 1943),
Melvin Edwards (American, b. 1937)
Theaster Gates (American, b. 1973),
Ken Gonzales-Day (American, b. 1964)
Wilmer Jennings (American, 1910-1990)
Norman Lewis, (American, 1909-1979)
Christian Marclay (American, b. 1955)
Kerry James Marshall (American, b. 1955)
Robin Rue Simmons former Evanston 5thWard Alderman, National African American Reparations Commission
Corey Winchester teacher, Evanston Township High School, advisor S.O.A.R.( Students Organized Against Racism)
Angela Williams Evanston Arts Council, Director of Design and Exhibit Development Museum of Science and Industry
Isamu Noguchi (American, 1904-1988)
Mendi + Keith Obadike (American, b. 1973)
Howardena Pindell (American b. 1943)
Carl and Karen Pope (American, b. 1961)
Walter Quirt (American, 1902-1968)
Paul Rucker (American, b. 1968)
Lorna Simpson (American, b. 1960)
Dox Thrash (American, 1893-1965)
Molly Jae Vaughan (British, b. 1977)
Lynd Ward (American, 1905–1985)
Pat Ward Williams (American, b. 1948)
Carrie Mae Weems (American, b. 1953)
Ida B. Wells (American, 1862-1931)
Walter White (American, 1893-1955), Hale Woodruff (American, 1900-1980)
EXHIBITION ADVISORS
SCHOLARS & MUSEUM PROFESSIONALS
The themes, content, and format of the exhibition were developed in consultation with an interdisciplinary group of established and emerging scholars and museum professionals, NU faculty and graduate students, connected by their investigations of American art, visual culture, and African Americans’ production and representation within these fields. Their collaboration was anchored by two convenings held over 2018-2019.
Sampada Aranke
Assistant Professor, Art History, Theory & Criticism, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
La Tanya S. Autry
Ph.D. candidate, Art History, University of Delaware, Cultural Organizer and Independent Curator, Black Liberation Center
Courtney Baker
Associate Professor of American Studies and Black Studies, Occidental College
Elisabeth Callihan
Head of Multi-Generational Learning, Minneapolis Institute of Art (M.I.A.) and co-founder of MASS Action (Museums as Sites for Social Action)
Bridget R. Cook
Associate Professor, Department of African American Studies and Department of Art History, University of California, Irvine
Leslie Harris
Professor, Department of History, Northwestern University
Ross Jordan
Curatorial Manager, Jane Addams HullHouse Museum
Noémi Michel
Visiting Scholar, Department of African American Studies, Northwestern University and Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science and International Relations, University of Geneva
Valerie Cassel Oliver
Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Kymberly Pinder, Ph.D.
Provost & Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs, Massachusetts College of Art and Design; ( incoming Dean, School of Art, Yale University)
Maurita Poole, Ph.D.
Director, Clark Atlanta University Art Galleries
Veronica Roberts
Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Blanton Museum of Art, University of Texas at Austin
Nicole Soukup
Assistant Curator of Contemporary Art, M.I.A.
Shawn Michelle Smith
Professor, Visual and Critical Studies, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Lorelei Stewart
Director, Gallery 400, University of Illinois at Chicago
LaCharles Ward
Post-Doctoral Fellow, Center for Media at Risk, University of Pennsylvania
Mlondolozi Zondi
Ph.D. Candidate, Performance Studies, Northwestern University
EXHIBITION — SPRING 2022 BLOSSOM SOUP, BLOSSOM SALAD
2022 MFA Thesis Exhibition
Alsdorf Gallery
May 6-June 19, 2022
The 2022 Master of Fine Arts degree candidates
— Yani aviles, an emard, Whitney Johnson, Scott Kemp, Travis Morehead, jess mai walker — present their thesis projects and conclude their residencies in the Department of Art Theory and Practice at Northwestern University. This year's thesis exhibition is accompanied by events, programming, and a publication.
THESIS SHOWCASE — SPRING 2022
THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS
NU MFA Doc Media Thesis Showcase
Block Cinema
June 9-10, 2022
Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking-Glass showed the world that life isn’t always what it seems to be. This is also the work of documentary films in reflecting our realities back to us. Amid a world of staggering unpredictability, “Through the Looking-Glass” showcased short films by MFA Documentary Media students who step into their own looking-glasses of introspection to find themselves and others in their rawest and most intimate forms and truths. Each night of screenings featured a selection of new short documentaries, with the opportunity to engage with the makers and celebrate their accomplishments
Student Associate designed sweatshirt commemorating their 2021-2022 yearWHO SAYS, WHO SHOWS, WHAT COUNTS
Marking its 40th Anniversary, The Block considered authorship and responsibility in the shaping of historical narratives.
Asking ‘Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts’ to mark our 40th anniversary 80 new acquisitions invite audiences to consider how artists and collections challenge our view of the past.
images”
Sarah Maza, Andrea Carlson, Tonika Lewis Johnson, and Chris Pappan on art and history.
Reframing the Past in Rosalie Favell
& Shan Goshorn's work
Acknowledging the problematic relationship between indigenous cultures and the camera.
“Collections are Museums’ Self- Portraits”
An analysis of the exhibition section Institutions Critiqued.
Channeling Indigenous Histories
Sky Hopinka in Conversation.
Who Says?
Block Student Associates share their reflections on works that resonated.
“This battle has been fought with
2021-2022 STORIES
A SITE OF STRUGGLE
Our landmark 2022 exhibition explored how artists have engaged with the reality and challenges of representing anti-Black violence.
"What Art Does"
Lisa Corrin on the Block's 2021-22 themes.
The power of the visual to make change
A Site of Struggle exhibition announcement
An Opening Offering
Opening conversation with remarks by Courtney R. Baker, Dino Robinson, Carl and Karen Pope, Robin R. Means Coleman, and Natasha Trethewey
On Collaboration, Context, and Counterpoints
“May we all be free”
A conversation with Joshua Bee Alafia on bringing meditation to the museum space
Art and Activism
Contemporary Resonances of the 1935 NAACP exhibition “An Art Commentary on Lynching” [Video]
A Conversation Series on Museum Practice [Video]
Carl and Karen Pope, Robin R. Means Coleman, and Natasha Trethewey
“A fundamental obligation to promote truth”
A Northwestern University Discussion on A Site of Struggle
Aligned Academics
Two Northwestern courses offer indepth exploration of A Site of Struggle
2021-2022 STORIES
A SITE OF STRUGGLE
A Site of Struggle traveled to the Montgomery Museum of Fine Art, Alabama where the conversation continued.
Sharing the Struggle
The Block shared reflections from the exhibition comment card project
Spaces for Dialogue
Janet Dees, Angie Dodson, Ashley Rogers and Dietrah Taylor on museum professionals as advocates
Forthright Questions
Discussing A Site of Struggle at Auburn University
MMFA Exhibition Opening
A Site of Struggle opens at the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts
Staying with the Struggle
Exhibition scholars reflect on studying anti-Black violence
Histories of
Struggle
Allyson Nadia Field on the film
10—U.S.A. 10,000”
STUDENT VOICES
Students are essential to The Block's mission. In 2021-22 we continued to expand the scope of our Student Associates, Fellows, and Internship programs -through which student play a key role in animating the vision of the museum.
Meet the 2021-22 Block Museum Art
Meet our 2021-2022 Intern
Sarah Dwider History Fellow Madie GiaconiaStudent Associates
The Block launches new Student Associates program with 16-member cohort, updating its Student Docent program
Chayda Harding
Block Student Associate leader recognized with 2022 Wildcat Impact Award
Partnership Spotlight
American Sign Language – English Interpretation Program
2022 Student Acquisition
Block Museum Student Associates select work by Michael Koerner
Parting Gift
Artist Leonard Suryajaya unveils photographic collaboration with Block Museum students
“We celebrate one another’s specificities”
Leonard Suryajaya in conversation [Video]
CONNECTIONS, DISCUSSION, & TEACHING
The Block is driven by the currency of ideas. These dialogues, discussions and ongoing projects represent the connections that catalyzed our work this year.
One Step in the Footpath of Many
Block curators focus on converging Indigenous art in Tulsa partnership
The Joy and Chaos of Collectivity
Communicating through Art
Museum clinical study partnership considers the role of art in combating primary progressive aphasia
Holding Binoculars, Pointing a Camera
Filmmakers Frédéric Moffet, Joelle Mercedes, and Deborah Stratman
“Who gets to describe the world?”
Director Courtney Stephens in Conversation
Roycemore School’s
‘Museum Mania’ Partnership Spotlight
An Immersive Practice Conversations with Christopher Harris, Crystal Z. Campbell & Paige Taul
The Limits of the Archive
A Conversation with Chase Joynt [Audio]
To Render the Infinite Kevin Jerome Everson, Paige Taul, & zakkiyyah najeebah dumas o’neal in conversation [Audio]
COLLECTION & ACQUISITION
STORIES
From new works to new research, 2021-22 brought opportunities to explore and activate our collection in rich and surprising ways.
A Close Look
Margaret Burrough’s “Mother and Child”
Collection Talk
Henry Simon “Industrial Frankenstein” (1932) [Video]
Collection Talk
W. Eugene Smith “Robert Slocombe, Monsanto Chemical Co” (1953) [Video]
Collection Talk
Will Wilson “Shiprock Disposal Cell, Shiprock, New Mexico, Navajo Nation” (2020) [Video]
Collection Spotlight
Mikki Ferrill, Untitled (Chicago, IL)
Collection Spotlight
Pothi Box, Dayanita Singh
Collection Spotlight
Models in Gowns by Madeleine Vionnet, Edward Steichen
SPOTLIGHT: IF YOU REMEMBER, I'LL REMEMBER
Softcover
130 Pages, 7.00 x 9.75 in Paperback - 46 color illustrations
ISBN 9781732568433
Published Summer 2022
Northwestern University Press
On the occassion of the fifth anniversary of the exhibition If You Remember, I'll Remember, The Block was proud to release a retrospective publication that considers the project as a case study of engaged museum practice.
If You Remember, I'll Remember (2017) was an invitation to reflect upon the connection between the past and present through works of art. Exploring themes of love, mourning, war, relocation, and resistance in nineteenth- and twentieth-century America, it brought together the work of seven contemporary artists whose practices are based in archival research and incorporate historic documents and objects: Kristine Aono (b. 1960), Shan Goshorn (b. 1957-2018), Samantha Hill (b. 1974), McCallum & Tarry (active 1998-2013), Dario Robleto (b. 1972), and Marie Watt (b. 1967).
This richly illustrated publication serves as a record of the exhibition, its related programs, and its in-depth engagement projects - from sewing circles focused on the theme of equity to conversations with internment camp survivors - developed through discussion and collaboration with artists and campus and community partners. The retrospective nature of the publication allows for the inclusion of participants' voices, and reflection upon the broader process of museums working closely with multiple stakeholders. This approach contributes a valuable case study to current methodological conversations about collaborations between artists, museums, and communities.
SPOTLIGHT: ALT TEXT INITIATIVE
In March 2021, the Association of Art Museum Curators (AAMC) called on its members to advocate across museum departments to create action plans for DEIA practices in collections work, including working across departments and institutions to catalogue artist identity respectfully and accurately. This call resonated with communications with our own audience base asking us to invest in increased equitable access to our collections. We have recognized that digital cataloguing and its related responsibilities play a critical role in our commitments to value-driven representation of our diverse and growing collection.
Maintaining the database requires the ongoing review of object records against ethical cataloguing best practices that are benchmarked in dialogue with peers. It also requires the documentation of new findings about artists and their works and specialized training of staff and students to make our research available online using standardized formats and nomenclature. Standards for the ethical cataloguing and digital accessibility of online art collections are
rapidly changing, and we see an exciting opportunity to become a leader in the academic art museum space.
With a part-time Curatorial Associate now dedicated to Collections work, we have been able to launch cross-departmental partnerships, to embark on new ethical cataloguing projects, and to determine areas in need of more support. In Fall 2021, we launched our first multi-year collections information initiative: beginning to include “Alt Texts” for images of artworks in our public-facing collection database, content that is required to be compliant with Northwestern’s digital accessibility requirements. Alt texts are descriptive texts that are available on our collection website, providing an alternative for visitors who are blind or visually impaired. At our current capacity, after a year and a half of work, we have completed alt texts for 25% of The Block’s online collection.
–Melanie Garcia Sympson Curatorial Coordinator, Collections Information and Digital Interpretation2021–2022 ACQUISITIONS
Fernando Bryce (Peruvian, born 1965)
ARTNews 1948 II
2016
Ink on wove paper in thirteen parts
46 3/4 × 96 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Anonymous Gift 2022.1.1a-m
Fernando Bryce (Peruvian, born 1965)
Apollo 11/Luna 15
2019
Ink on wove paper in two parts 41 × 60 1/2 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Anonymous Gift 2022.1.2a-b
Jess Dugan (American, born 1986)
Every Breath We Drew
2019–2021
Portfolio of ten photographs
18 x 13 1/2 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Julie and Lawrence Bernstein Family Art Acquisition Fund purchase 2022.5a-m
Mikki Ferrill (American, born 1937)
Untitled, Chicago, IL ca. 1965, printed before 1980
Gelatin silver print 10 × 8 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Irwin and Andra S. Press Collection Endowment Fund purchase 2021.15
Mikki Ferrill (American, born 1937)
Untitled, Lake Michigan, Chicago, IL, from the series Sisters in White
1973, printed before 1980
Gelatin silver print
9 15/16 × 7 15/16 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Irwin and Andra S. Press Collection Endowment Fund purchase 2022.4.1
Mikki Ferrill (American, born 1937)
Untitled
1974, printed before 1980
Gelatin silver print
8 × 9 15/16 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Irwin and Andra S. Press Collection Endowment Fund purchase 2022.4.2
Michael Koerner, Ph.D. (Japanese-American, born Okinawa, Japan, 1963)
The Beast Diagnosis #8942, from the series The Beast Diagnosis
2019
Chemigram on wet plate collodion positive (tintype) 8 × 12 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, 2021–2022 Block Museum Student Associates acquisition, Block Student Impact Fund purchase
2022.2.1
Michael Koerner, Ph.D. (Japanese-American, born Okinawa, Japan, 1963)
Worlds #0318, from the series Worlds
2020
Chemigram on wet plate collodion positive (tintype) 8 × 12 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, 2021–2022 Block Museum Student Associates acquisition, Block Student Impact Fund purchase
2022.2.2
Michael Koerner, Ph.D. (Japanese-American, born Okinawa, Japan, 1963)
Blue DNA #1205L - #1201R, from the series Blue DNA 2021
Chemigram on wet plate collodion positive (tintype) (diptych)
12 × 16 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, 2021–2022 Block Museum Student Associates acquisition, Block Student Impact Fund purchase
2022.2.3a b
These works by Koerner are entering the collection at a time of immense global strife as war ignites in Ukraine and a renewed nuclear threat resurrects the globe’s Cold War-era fears. Acquiring these works in a newfound era of uncertainty allows art to provide a potential catalyst for better understanding and coping with the realities we presently face. In his works, he offers a new framing of tragedy and how tragedy affects and manifests contemporarily, explicitly locating their implications in human cell structure.
–Student Associates Acquisition Justification
2021–2022 ACQUISITIONS
Nathan Lerner (American, 1913–1997)
Untitled
mid-20th century
Graphite and colored pencil on paper
15 × 11 1/2 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, gift of Kiyoko Lerner
2021.14.1
Nathan Lerner (American, 1913–1997)
Untitled
mid-20th century
Tempera on paper
11 7/8 × 9 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, gift of Kiyoko Lerner
2021.14.2
Sol LeWitt (American 1928–2007)
Wall Drawing 215
September 1973 (first installation)
Black crayon on wall
Dimensions variable
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, gift of Steven P. Henry and Philip Schneidman
2021.12
Tatsuo Miyajima (Japanese, born 1957)
Counter Fragile No. 7
2005
LEDs and stainless steel wire supports on clear acrylic base 15 1/2 × 13 1/8 × 7 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, gift of Richard and Mary L. Gray
Collection
2022.3.1
Elle Pérez (American, born 1987)
Mae at Riis Beach
2020/2021
Inkjet print, pigment-based 35 × 23 3/8 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Purchase funds provided by Marissa Solomon Sutker and Evan Reed Solomon
2021.13
Shabtai Pinchevsky (Israeli, born 1986)
"In 'Mae at Riis Beach' Pérez photographs their friend Mae standing knee-deep in the ocean as part of long-term project with the subject which has continued throughout her transition process. Rather than stand outside looking in as other photographers might, Pérez works through their creative process as a friend, an intimate participant. “Intimacy intrigues me with its mysteries,” the artist has said. “The ties between my gender identity, kink, sexuality, pleasure, and pain are all interwoven. Instead of attempting to untangle them, I work within these complexities."
–Essi Rönkkö, Associate Curator of CollectionsAn Abridged Draft for a Letter to Leila Khaled
2021
Single-channel digital video, color, sound, 12:23 minutes, loop
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Lisa Munster Tananbaum and Steven Tananbaum Fund purchase
2022.6
Carl Pope (American, born 1961) and Karen Pope (American, born 1961)
Palimpsest
1999
Single-channel video, color, sound, 6:37 minutes, loop
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Irwin and Andra S. Press Collection Endowment fund purchase
2022.8
Giovanni Battista Piranesi (Italian, 1720 1778)
The Palazzo dell' Accademia di Francia
1752
Etching on paper 15 3/4 × 24 1/4 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, gift of Richard and Mary L. Gray Collection
2022.3.2
Barbara Rossi (American, born 1940)
Eye Deal
1973
Lithograph on thin wove paper, laid down on buff wove paper (chine collé)
16 × 12 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Gift of Kohler Foundation, Inc.
2022.9.1
In Spring of 2022 The Block Museum of Art was thrilled to unveil an original artwork created for the museum’s collection by Chicago-based contemporary artist Leonard Suryajaya in collaboration with the 2021-2022 Block Museum of Art Student Associates.
Artist Prompts for Student Associates Photoshoot:
• How do you want to be seen?
• What aspects of your identity do you want to make visible or amplify?
Barbara Rossi (American, born 1940)
Eye Deal
1974
Lithograph on thin wove paper, laid down on ivory wove paper (chine collé) 24 × 18 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Gift of Kohler Foundation, Inc.
2022.9.2
Barbara Rossi (American, born 1940)
Dome Drawing I
1968
Graphite and colored pencil on paper 10 × 10 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Gift of Kohler Foundation, Inc.
2022.9.3
Barbara Rossi (American, born 1940)
Peter Weasel Rocking
1969
Colored pencil on paper 29 × 23 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Gift of Kohler Foundation, Inc.
2022.9.4
• How will you communicate this through your costume/attire, skills, and accessories/objects that are meaningful to you?
• What role will flowers have to disrupt or embellish this idea?
Leonard Suryajaya (Chinese-Indonesian, born 1988)
Perennial Blossom from the series Parting Gift 2022
Inkjet print 40 x 50 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, gift of Leonard Suryajaya
2022.7
2021-2022 GIFTS OF ART
• Anonymous
• Kiyoko Lerner
• Steven P. Henry
2021–2022 LOANS FROM THE COLLECTION
Joan Truckenbrod: Digital Fibers – 1975 to Present
Schneider Museum of Art, Southern Oregon University, Ashland, OR August 3, 2021 through September 16, 2021
Joan Truckenbrod (American, born 1945)
Electronic Patchwork
1978
Color photocopy of computer monitor display transferred to polyester sheet
80 x 55 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, gift of Joan Truckenbrod, 2008.15.1
EMERGENCE: Black Queer Intersections at the Center
Southside Community Art Center
Chicago, IL
March 31, 2022 through July 15, 2022
Mikki Ferrill (American, born 1937)
Untitled (The Garage,Chicago,1973)
1973
Gelatin silver print
11 x 14 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, The Richard Florsheim Art Fund Purchase, 2000.25.1
Untitled (The Garage,Chicago,1973)
1973
Gelatin silver print
11 x 14 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, The Richard Florsheim Art Fund Purchase, 2000.25.2
Untitled,Chicago,IL
ca. 1965, printed before 1980
Gelatin silver print
10 x 8 in.
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, the Irwin and Andra S. Press Collection Endowment Fund purchase, 2021.15
2021–2022 STORIES
MUSEUM VIEWS
The Block's staff shares thoughts on the year's impact and learning.
This year, we have worked to connect intersecting communities – on campus, in Evanston, across Chicago, and beyond -- with the Block and each other through programs and initiatives that make visible what art is, and what it does in the world; to enrich the Northwestern co-curricular student experience, support student well-being, and offer hands-on learning opportunities in the arts and museums; and to build new bridges with partners in Evanston for shared learning and engagement.
—Erin Northington Susan and Stephen Wilson Associate Director, Campus and Community Education and EngagementOver the past year, we have been inspired by artworks that reframe the past and shape the future. Our Fall 2021 exhibition asked, Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts, while inviting many Northwestern voices into our effort to think about history through art. Our Winter/Spring 2022 exhibition, A Site of Struggle: American Artists Against Anti-Black Violence, called on art and artists to guide us in grappling with the enduring reality of anti-Black violence in the United States.
—Kathleen Bickford Berzock Associate Director of Curatorial AffairsThis year our students have had opportunities to work with staff across all museum departments, gaining rich perspective into both collaborative and independent curatorial work. This work now takes many shapesfrom presentations and installation, to brochures, blogs, and other digital strategies, as our students help us consider new approaches to research and interpretation.
—Corinne Granof Academic CuratorI have been so deeply moved by the way A Site of Struggle has been taken up as a resource for both the Northwestern University and greater Evanston communities and humbled by colleagues nationally citing it as a model of museum practice. Groups as different as Evanston Township High School’s Students Organized Against Racism (S.O.A.R) and Feinberg School of Medicine’s Palliative Care program have centered the exhibition in discussions around racial violence, racial equity, and trauma-informed care.
In 2021-2022 we were able to embrace new storytelling tools to activate meaningful conversations with and among our audiences. We created knowledge in print and online, as well as in the gallery - reaching audiences across platforms to showcase the many forms a museum's work can take. Both Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts and A Site of Struggle became opportunities for the rich dialogue and partnership stories that form the core of our institutional narrative. Of particular note, our blog reached over 25,000 readers who engaged with our news, essays, videos, and insights.
—Lindsay Bosch Senior Manager of Marketing & CommunicationsOur exhibition and publication project Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts: Thinking about History with The Block’s Collection in the fall felt not only like the culmination of three years of work to build our collection and relationships across campus; it felt like a launching point for new ways for connecting the collection to the curriculum. We already saw positive ripple effects in the winter and spring term in the form of increased collection use in the study room. I look forward to building on this momentum in the coming years.
—Essi Rönkkö Associate Curator of Collections Block Cinema screening on Chicago RiverwalkThis year we were thrilled to see our traveling exhibition program realized across different projects: Caravans of Gold was able to open in Washington D.C at the National Museum of African Art, while we also planned for A Site of Struggle to travel to the Montgomery Museum of Fine Art in August 2022. We were also able to highlight our growing collection by mounting several exhibitions drawn entirely from our holdings. This strategy of exhibition making helps increase the teaching, learning and research impact of our work by having more of it on public display. We are excited to continue looking for these opportunities in the coming years.
—Dan Silverstein Associate Director of Collections and Exhibition ManagementThis year I was fortunate enough to work on the return of all the artworks from the Caravans of Gold exhibition. It was especially rewarding to return the loans from Africa back to all their institutions. I received a WhatsApp call afterward from a staff member at the National Museum in Lagos, Nigeria and was able to say thank you to everyone there. It was such an honor and a privilege to work on this exhibition!
—Kristina Bottomley Assistant Director of Exhibitions and CollectionsThroughout 2021-2022, Block Cinema invited audiences to look beyond the screen, with illuminating in-person conversations around films that explore the histories and communities represented in Block exhibitions. Strong attendance for programs like Holding Binoculars, Pointing a Camera and Block by Block: Short Films About Chicago revealed our audience’s appetite for unusual documentaries that speak to the world we inhabit together. With over 25 guest filmmaker appearances throughout the year, we not only showed movies—we created transformative encounters for students, faculty, and the larger community.
—Michael Metzger Pick-Laudati Curator of Media Arts2021-22 was a wonderful learning opportunity for the Engagement department in the creation of programming that arose from true partnership. This year the ideas that sparked our dialogues and events were often ideated from the community, student and partner expertise all around us. We embraced our role as a connective department, one that excels in creating moments where folks from varied spaces of knowledge and expertise can intersect and create something new.
—Isabella Ko Engagement Coordinator2021–2022 DONOR HONOR ROLL
$50,000 and above
Craig Ponzio
Diane Solomon and Craig
Solomon
Dorothy J. Speidel
Lisa Munster Tananbaum and Steven A. Tananbaum
Susan K. Wilson and Stephen R. Wilson
$25,000-$49,999
William W. Caldwell
Ellen Philips Katz
Eugene E. Myers*
Sandra L. Riggs
David C. Ruttenberg*
$10,000-$24,999
Kim Allen-Niesen and Keith Allen-Niesen
Mary Baglivo and James Meguerian
Elizabeth Bohart and Stuart Henry Bohart
Priscilla A. Vail Caldwell
Barbara N. Fuldner
Amy O. Geier and James Geier
Lisa Kadin and William Spiegel
Dianne Dardes Loeb and Stephen B. Loeb
Andra S. Press and Irwin Press
Susan Gecht Rieser and Richard M. Rieser
Christine Olson Robb and William John Robb, III
$5,000-$9,999
Anu Aggarwal and Arjun
Aggarwal
Clare Bell
Daniel S. Berger
Christine Meleo Bernstein and Armyan Bernstein
Nicole E. Rubens Druckman and James N. Druckman
Lynn E. Hauser and Neil L. Ross
Steven P. Henry
Cheryl Johnson-Odim
Zeynep Yasemin Keyman and Melih Keyman
Sari Klein and James A. Klein
Carol J. Narup
Ronnie K. Pirovino
Josef J. Tatelbaum
Martha P. Tedeschi and Michael Lukasiewicz
$1,000-$4,999
Anonymous
Nancy A. Abshire
Katherine Bacon Best and Robert J. Best
Stacey L. Cantor and Lowell Cantor
Kay Kujala Deaux
Janet Sally Dumas
Kristin Peterson Edwards
Judith Rachel Freeman
Carol Ginsburg and Jerome J. Ginsburg
Denise M. Gunter
Jean L. Guritz and Gary Robert Guritz
Rosalyn M. Laudati and James B. Pick
Nancy Tims Magill and R. Hugh Magill
Graciela Claudia Meltzer and Neal D. Meltzer
Diane Baraban More Carol J. Narup
Janis W. Notz and John K. Notz
Katherine Laun Olson
Debby Peterson
Jane H. Peterson and Lloyd J. Peterson
Sarah M. Pritchard and Neal E. Blair
Karen Richards Sachs and David Allan Sachs
Jean E. Shedd
Robert F. Vail
Arete Swartz Warren
$500-$999
P. Lindsay Chase-Lansdale
Julie Freund Cowhey
Kate Ezra
Edwin G. Goldstein
Christopher P. Huisinga
Susan Wascher-Kumar and Prem Kumar
Debra K. Mellinger and Edward M. Mellinger Jr.
Mary Scott Patronik and Timothy J. Patronik
Duorita Jo Shorts
Elizabeth G. Stout*
Marissa Solomon Sutker and Jake Sutker
Susan Wascher-Kumar
Elizabeth Zeitler and Maximillian Zeitler
$250-$499
Kelsey Joanne Allen-Niesen
Dennis Taylor Burgart
Sally S. Dobroski and Bernard J. Dobroski
Bryna Goldman Gamson and Edward P. Gamson
Margaret Lynn Hughitt
Matthew Alan Kluk
Theodore C. Koutlas
Marilyn McCoy and Charles R. Thomas
Maria Nardelli and William R. Levin
Vicki L. Sauter
James R. Shaeffer
Donald Tritschler
Thomas O. Zurfluh
Northwestern University
Alice Kaplan Institute for the Humanities
Black Arts Initiative
British Cluster
Department of English
Gender & Sexuality Studies
The Graduate School
Performance Studies; School of Communication
Radio, Television, and Film; School of Communication
Undergraduate Research Assistant Program
*Deceased
2021 –2022 GRANTS
Among the grant highlights of the past year, The Block’s upcoming exhibition on the Indigenous art history of Chicago (2025) received a second award from the Terra Foundation for American Art, with these funds dedicated to community engagement research and development. The Indigenous methodological approach of that project’s development has led to a sustained shift in the museum’s grant proposals in order to emphasize process over product and to reflect reciprocal partnerships throughout project development, including fundraising work. This approach has been welcomed by sponsors who are seeking to evolve their funding practices to be more equitable and inclusive. Other major support received for upcoming exhibitions and programs include grants from the David C. and Sarajean Ruttenberg Arts Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.
–Kate Hadley Toftness Senior Advancement Manager, Grants and Collection CouncilINSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT
$100,000 AND ABOVE
Terra Foundation for American Art
Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts
$25,000 – $99,999
National Endowment for the Arts Myers Foundations
David C. and Sarajean Ruttenberg Arts Foundation
$10,000 – $24,999
Illinois Arts Council Agency
The Alumnae of Northwestern University
$5,000 – $9,999
Elizabeth F. Cheney Foundation
Up to $4,999
Furthermore: A program of the J.M. Kaplan Fund
Alice Kaplan Institute for the Humanities